COVID-19 INFORMATION

COVID-19 is creating many obstacles for small businesses around the world. During these challenging times, our top priority is the health of our associates and NatraCure community members like you.

We have adapted to working remotely, while still remaining fully operational. We appreciate your patience if there are ever minor shipping delays. Remember that our team is dedicated to assisting you in any way we can. So please feel free to contact us. That’s what we’re here for!

We also hope everyone can remember that this troubling situation is temporary. We are all in this together. And we will come out stronger than ever.

We would like to remind everyone to be kind to one another and to follow the guidelines of reliable sources like the CDC and WHO.

We hope all of our customers and their loved ones are safe and healthy.

Celebrations held at harvest time, like Thanksgiving in the USA, have always been a part of most cultures. Romans celebrated a harvest festival that honored Ceres, the goddess of corn, while ancient Greek women honored Demeter, the goddess of grain. Chuseok is the autumn festival in Korea, a national celebration where people return to their hometowns to remember their ancestors.The human need to express gratitude seems to be a powerful & almost universal phenomenon. We create elaborate rituals & traditions that surround the concept of giving thanks- but why do we do this? That’s exactly what Robert A. Emmons, Ph.D., a psychology professor at the University of California discovered. The author of Gratitude Works!: A 21-Day Program for Creating Emotional Prosperity. Emmons is one of the pioneers of research into the ways that gratitude affects our lives. To assess people’s levels of thankfulness, Emmons & his colleague Michael E. McCullough created a questionnaire that allowed them to compare “grateful people” to those who were less so. They also found ways to cultivate gratitude in test subjects — keeping a “gratitude journal,” counting one’s blessings, writing letters of thanks — then studied the changes that occurred as a result.“For too long, the concept of gratitude had been ignored,” said Emmons, director of the university’s Emmons Lab, which creates & shares scientific data on gratitude, its causes, & its potential effects on human health & well-being. He calls it “the forgotten factor in the science of well-being."